If the wounds are too fresh and the thought of forgiving the person who abused and upset you hurts too much, honor that. There is no shame in not being ready. It is normal and everyone’s timeline is different. Close the article for the time being or read it for nothing more than future reference, with no pressure or expectations. Allow yourself to feel all that you do, the pain included, with as much passion and purpose as possible. After a while, come back to it. Examine what you have gained, rather than concentrate on what you have lost, even if what you have lost is significant. The hope is that your personal growth is also significant and that the positive things you come to learn about yourself are far greater. Believe it or not, the day may come when you are not only able to forgive, but thank the person who brought you here, but that is all in time…
Forgiveness can be a tough subject to broach when the ones we are considering forgiving are the psychopaths who harmed us. Eventually, however, we should try to find a way to do it.
Why we should forgive
Resentment and anger eat away at us. Even though we may have been seriously wronged by the psychopaths who crossed our paths, holding on to those feelings hurts us, not them. Nelson Mandela once said, “Resentment is like drinking poison and hoping it will kill your enemies.” While it seems like an easy enough concept to grasp, putting it into practice may prove more challenging. While in the midst of the anger, confusion, and disbelief that almost always accompanies our brushes with psychopathy, it’s tough to imagine forgiving the person who tried to hurt us. But forgiveness is a funny thing. The reason it must occur has less to do with our wrong-doers, and more to do with us. Forgiving helps us heal.
What does the process look like?
This will not come easy or fast. In fact, it would be wrong to rush it. We must honor each of the stages of the grief process in order to fully heal. But eventually, we have to let go of any remaining ill feelings so that we can grow and move forward. The psychopaths’ acts may have been truly horrible, so we need not excuse them, but we can learn not to allow them to damage us further. As long as we are caught in negative feelings, our offenders are still winning. Hopefully, we can come to the place where we re-empower ourselves and re-gain control of our lives.
Forgiveness does not need to mean forgetting. We should not forget what happened to us or behave as if it never occurred. Rather, we should remember what we went through so that we don’t allow the evil back in or repeat our pasts with others in the future. Further, we need not expect anything from those who did us harm. In cases such as ours, they either enjoyed what they did or to us or were merely using us for their own “advancement.” There are no sincere apologies coming from them….ever, so do not look for one. This is about us and our peace and we can do this without seeing them or exchanging any words. For once, it is actually all about us.
What we come to feel
Recently, someone new to the struggle asked me how I feel about what happened to me and how I feel about the person in my situation. I had to think for a moment, but finally decided that I feel “nothingness.” Where I was once consumed with emotion, I now see this person as a void. It is almost like a chapter of my life that did not exist, in spite of the fact that it was extremely significant.
I know that the situation was real and awful. I care about and acknowledge what occurred, as the storm I weathered hit with a tsunami-like force. However, I lived, learned, and somehow, grew. I think I became a better person along the way, as a result. Without the experience, I don’t think I would have realized that I was only living half alive, realizing only a portion of my potential. I would not have known the strength I was capable of, without this test.
I believe that when we no longer allow them control over us, we come to feel “even” again. At that point, what once existed as love, hate, anger, and sadness disappears, becoming “nothingness.” We come to see our perpetrators as insignificant, even if their acts were not. It is then that we can forgive because what was, no longer matters.
We can move toward the future for ourselves and those we care about. For the first time, probably in a long time, the psychopath takes a permanent back seat, regardless of any residual antics. It takes time and the road is long, but eventually, we can release the demons and thrive. The rewards will come. They may not be concrete or quantifiable, but we will begin to recognize them when we feel them.
Sparklehorse, it’s good to “see” you, again! And, TOWANDA on the NC!!!!
Yepper – toxicity is OUT and Life gets better, absolutely! The interesting thing is retrospect. I look at where I was at this time, last year, and see where I am, today. The recovery happens in fits and spurts, and sometimes it’s so slow that I don’t even notice it.
It’s SO terrific to read your recovery – the tone of your response and the indifference to the spath is CLEAR in your words!!!!! OxD typed it as, “Nirvana of Indifference,” and there is something to be said about that. Life may not be perfect, but there is a sense of nirvana when the spaths are finally “felt” to be the meaningless things that they are.
TOWANDA, again!!!! And, brightest blessings
Thank you, Truthspeak! Yours post also reveal an extraordinary amount of resiliency, particularly since your divorce became finalized. And hats off to you for not taking the bankruptcy bait from the ex-spath!
Best wishes for continued recovery.
jeannie812,
How terrible for you. My mother was a martyr but a loving mother and all three sisters blamed our abusive father and worshiped her…maybe because she died when we were young. I thought I was doing my children a favor by divorcing their abusive psychopath dad but I had no idea of the evil that he is capable of perpetuating beneath his sardonic smile. He worked on my children in secret all the time they were growing up. He won…at least he won my daughter. My son married a darling who can see through his dad. But I am trying to get on with my life. I was ready to spend my remaining years being a doting grand mother and loving it but she destroyed all of that. So I am going to travel and spend her inheritance on having a good time. It sounds vindictive, but my husband and I deserve to be happy and not mope around in misery hoping to regain visitation with our grandchildren.
Oxy,
Thank you so much for your words of wisdom.
So true, it is hard to wrap my brain around how much “cold hatred and utter contempt” my daughter has for me. I do not know which is worse, this or the total indifference and control her father uses.
I am tearing up over:
“First: There is NOTHING YOU COULD HAVE DONE TO HAVE PREVENTED THIS. Believe that.
Secondly: THERE IS NOTHING YOU CAN DO TO CHANGE IT, believe that. ”
I guess that means I am beginning to believe it even though it is much more painful than believing it is all my fault. Can you understand that? I guess it is the finality that I cannot ever fix what I did not cause. But the futility of trying to fix it has almost killed me. Everything I have tried, using reason, trying communication, unconditional love, understanding, taking blame myself has backfired. She just does not want anything from me. I felt like she just did not want to fix it but perhaps it just cannot be fixed.
And I am working on:
Thirdly; YOU CAN STILL HAVE A GOOD LIFE even though 1 and 2 are true.
It will be a different life than I had envisioned but it can still be a good life. I am beginning to open up to new ideas and a new depth of Spirituality which is getting back into the flow of my own life…letting go and letting God.
darwinsmom,
What you say is so true and I have accepted it on the part of the sperm donor. Your words however, ring true of my daughter, whom I still want to believe is sweet and kind and just under his spell. I have been agonizing over when she changed so radically and it could be one or more of many situations, her dad, her marriage, her admitting she is an alcoholic, her joining AA, her not getting real treatment. But the one thing I have been afraid to look at and have not mentioned before is that she became a mother herself.
I always believed when she became a mother that she would understand me better and we could be best friends. Maybe I was delusional from my losing my mother at age 18. The fact is she understands me less, does not want me around at all and does not even seem to enjoy motherhood.
She seemed jealous of us as grandparents from the start. She accused me of interfering any time I did not agree with her. I always knew they were her children and respected that but she wanted to do so much the exact opposite of how I did it and then have me praise her for it. It felt like a setup from the beginning but I could not wrap my mind around it.
I am afraid to say it, do not want to say it, but need to say it: It feels like she hates us for loving her children so much; like she is jealous we have had so much fun with them and they love us back so much. She says I was a wonderful mother when she was little but I changed. I have changed but so has she and I do not know what changed first, the chicken or the egg. Maybe I will never know…and maybe that is for the best.
She does feel contempt for me like I have never known, even with my abusive father, neglectful mother and psychopath husband, I have never felt such utter cold hatred and contempt as she emits toward me…NEVER. I will not go on being miserable even for her. I would gladly die for her but I cannot do this.
I pray that I am wrong. I pray it for myself but mostly I pray it for her precious children.
Betsy,
I wasn’t sure which post you replied to… Is it the one about how I think envy and hate are tertiary spath feelings, feelings a normal, healthy person could not feel for a long time? I ask, so I can reply to you in a meaningful way for you.
Betsybugs, sweet sweetness, your post made me cry. I hope you find peace and love. She really doesn’t deserve you
I don’t need to ‘forgive’ my stalker of ANYTHING.
The only thing I need to move forward is peace and to be able
to forgive MYSELF for allowing someone like this piece of crap
to overtake my life like a leech of some kind. Period.
I have figured something out…you ladie’s tell me if I am wrong…
I am not male bashing, but stating a long standing truth, as it were..
men accept our independence and strengths until it comes
to a point where they simply MUST dominate. When we refuse the
domination any longer, then they resent our moralities, the very
same things that drew them to us in the first place.
Once you get a person like this out of your life,
I promise you…the best thing to do is keep them away
from you unless you want the same hell and drama in
your life with the last breath that you take. THEY NEVER
CHANGE. They only get worse.
If it is a potentially ‘dangerous’ stalker, then that means
the violence and ugliness only gets worse, each subsequent
time you let them back in. Even if they have never showed
you a potentially ‘dangerous side’, you must not think it is
not underneath that exterior. In my case, I was completely
and totally, utterly – BLOWN AWAY by the misdirected violence
I was seeing in someone I had originally thought was kind of like
(sort of) my ‘best friend’….it was that sudden and cold hearted.
It still gives me chills.
Stop and look: are you in a dangerous situation?
What can you do to protect yourself?
Make those preparations and always put your safety
FIRST with these predators.
Dupey
Dupey doo wah!!
you said,
“men accept our independence and strengths until it comes
to a point where they simply MUST dominate.”
In my case he saw an independent, strong woman and he planned my downfall. Meticulously.
I’m still here. Strongawoman is sssssstrongerrr than ever before.
Love and hugs dupey xx
(((strongawoman))) well, they can’t have a WOMAN
being stronger, smarter nor kinder or wiser…
YAY: Happy you are still here…
Me too: stronger than ever before.
Big hugs and love to you too.
xxoo